Finally Altaf Hussein, the founder and the controversial leader of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) has made everyone’s life easy by saying the ‘magic words’. Now it is easy for Farooq Sattar to take over the party, at least for a little while; easy for the Pak Sur Zameen party led by Mustafa Kamal to justify their claims against him; easy for the establishment to launch a heavier crackdown on the MQM; easy for the federal government to encourage Rangers to push forward, easy for the provincial government to keep distance from the operation; and easy for the judges to decide against the founder of the MQM and find him guilty of high treason.

In this long list of winners, the losers are the voters of Karachi, and the Urdu speaking community of the largest city of Pakistan; these are the people who entrusted Altaf Hussain to represent them for three decades in the assemblies. These people cast their vote in his favour every single time without ever evaluating a candidate or verifying his credentials even when he was out of country for more than two decades, and half of the time his telephonic speeches did not make any sense. For hours the workers would sit in front of the phone, their faces down, without making a noise, listening to the diatribe of a ‘semi madman’.

In my opinion, it was the trust of the people that led Hussain to lose his temperament, their confidence in him that he would not listen to anyone’s advice or calm down. Conceited, whatever came to his mind, he would blurt it out without ever trying to filter his thoughts. And just like an addict he continued to stretch a little more every time, till last week.

So disappointing were those words 10 days ago that Hussain’s own party had no choice but to disassociate with him urgently, the time for apology was gone and every effort to put the Humpty Dumpty back together was doomed to be unsuccessful. He had crossed the threshold, and by doing that he has affirmed that every politician should act composed even in a private gathering and think twice before he speaks. By keeping the filter on you not only avoid legal trouble but also stay true to your profession of serving the country and its people.

Was it planned or spontaneous? Was it to save the MQM from Altaf Hussain or to protect Altaf Hussain from criminal investigations and the on-going media trial? Or was it to provide a way out to workers who wanted to avoid torture?

Everyone has a different opinion about it while no one knows the truth. Speculations hence fill the ears, and gossip takes over the water-cooler discussions. However, there are a few things that go beyond speculations. First, a mass confusion surrounds the mohajir community about the future of their party, their united strength in the assemblies. Second, the fear that political vultures would attack and fight for each and every morsel of the pie consumes them. They worry that the party that was once known for its unity would be divided into smaller groups. Some would favour the MQM Pakistan; the others would vote for the faction led by Mustafa Kamal; a few would stand with the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf; and many would find refuge in the Jamaat-e-Islami. On top, the establishment would choose its own favourites. In the end, everyone would win a few seats. Yet the community would lose as a whole. And even after choosing members for the assemblies they would still lose representation.

While black clouds of despair loom over the MQM workers, people from other ethnicities are flaunting their patriotism in every form possible, as if one of the enemies of the state, like Mullah Fazlullah, has been killed, or Pakistan has won a military battle against India. To understand how deep this bias is ask people in Lahore or Sahiwal who they hate more. My guess: more than half would name Altaf Hussain over the former leaders of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan like Baitullah Mehsud or his successor Hakeemullah Mehsud. It is scary.

True, what Hussain said cannot be defended in the current situation, but it is also true that hatred towards him is not only because of his association with violence and crime, or because of his loose talk and over-the-top speeches. It is also partly towards his political strength, and his absolute control on the vote bank of a community. And whoever replaces him — if he becomes as powerful and as effective as he was — would have to go through the same public relations dilemma that he had to go through. He would also be promoted as an ‘Indian agent’ like the founder of the MQM was projected. In response if that leader — be it Farooq Sattar or Mustafa Kamal — also shows less control in his expression, and in case has not opted to stay out of Pakistan, he would definitely be judged and penalised, as his second-in-command sits in front of cameras announcing his disassociation.

ABDUL Sattar Edhi, the iconic humanitarian, who passed on recently, has been highly eulogised all over Pakistan and beyond. He has also received accolades for something more. He donated his corneas after death which bestowed the gift of sight on two visually impaired people.

Edhi’s donation was of immense importance. Coming from a person held in such admiration by all, his example has inspired many. That is what we need today — heroes who lead by example and not words alone. As it is, Edhi was a man of few words.

Dr Naqi Zafar, the secretary of the Transplantation Society of Pakistan, tells us that after the public learnt of Edhi’s eye donation, 504 people came forward to sign organ donor cards. This was a steep rise in a short period considering 1,390 people had become donors in four years since the Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation computerised its donor database and launched a campaign to mobilise people to will their organs posthumously to give patients with end-stage renal failure a new lease of life.

To many of us who have signed donor cards, it appears strange and incomprehensible why people are reluctant to part with their organs when they will no longer be needed. One mufti actually condemned Edhi for his noble act saying blindness was something given by God and should be accepted as such by the one afflicted by it. Strange logic — should science and medical research shut up shop? A wit responded by saying it was nature’s doing that babies were born without clothes.

The Challenge Is To Motivate People To Sign Donor Cards

The few muftis who oppose organ donation would do well to read up Majmua Khutabat edited by Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rahman. It records the proceedings of a seminar organised by the SIUT that brought a large number of religious scholars together to discuss the issue of deceased organ donation. Practically all of them agreed with their colleagues from Al Azhar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Iran who quote religious scriptures to prove that Islam recognises organ donation and brain death.

Dr Naqi Zafar tells me that in Pakistan, 30,000 people die of renal failure (as Edhi did) and 100,000 go down with liver failure. In 2015, only 900 kidney and 139 liver transplantations were performed in Pakistan. In every case, the organs were taken from live donors. The figures for organ failure can be expected to go up because our population is growing fast. Precious little is being done to promote preventive medicine, sanitation and potable water supply that alone can reduce morbidity by millions.

How urgent is the need to enhance the number of donors is pretty obvious from the resurgence of the illegal organ trade and tourism in the country that had virtually been wiped out after the Transplantation of Human Tissues and Organs Act 2010 had been enacted and many unscrupulous persons involved had been brought to court. Now it is reported that the trade is on the rise again.

Hence the need to give a fillip to the campaign. We need more humanists like Navid Anwer, the young man who lost his life in a road accident and became Pakistan’s first deceased organ donor in 1998 even before the programme had been institutionalised. Pakistan has had only five deceased organ donors so far, who are shining examples in a population of over 190 million.

The main practical constraint in promoting deceased organ donation is that organs can be used for transplantation only when the donor suffers brain death that usually occurs in an ICU setting. Only 1,014 brain deaths were recorded in 2007. The challenge is to make the concept of brain death understandable to all and motivate people to sign donor cards. Although Islamic scholars have issued Fatwas accepting brain death and deceased organ donation, cultural resistance and misunderstandings persist.

The SIUT, the premier transplantation institution in the country, has provided laudable holistic services free of charge to millions of patients for 40 years. Headed by another iconic figure, Dr Adib Rizvi, the institute treats healthcare as a basic right with its governing philosophy being compassion and ethics. Its public awareness campaigns have helped but mainly in live related donations.

One would have believed that corneal donation would meet less resistance since it is not as complicated and a donor doesn’t have to die in an ICU setting. In spite of the high incidence of corneal blindness in the country, people have not been generous. Corneas have had to be imported.

One hopes that people will understand the importance of organ donation for saving lives. Clerics can play a pivotal role in this regard. It is more important that we shed some of our cultural inhibitions and talk about issues such as health and terminal illness. More importantly, there is need for a discourse on life and death, and not simply life after death, a popular theme in sermons from the pulpit.

Source: dawn.com/news/1281477/organ-donation

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The Swimwear Saga

By Ozer Khalid

September 02, 2016

Sadly, but not surprisingly, in the summer of 2016, it is not stealthy sharks but harmless Burkini-clad Muslim women who have been thrust as the fiercest assault on the fragile French secular dinosaurs. On the pristine French Riviera, the lines between fashion, politics, rights and religion are being exploited as never before.

The Burkini saga is deeply dividing France’s fragile democracy. This is a sad travesty of political opportunism strangling French secularism under its own weighty contradictions at the altar of morality-policing the female form, whose ‘modesty’ to this very day is tragically dictated predominantly by men. What a woman wears is her business alone.

The Burkini debacle has (partially) and rightfully been reversed in a victory for common sense, a triumph for women’s rights as France’s supreme administrative court, Le Conseil d’État (the State Council), suspended the ‘Burkini’ ban. The State Council was positively swayed by the testimony of human rights organisations.

The State Council asserted that the anti-Burkini edict is an “illegal infringement of fundamental freedoms” and that local authorities could only limit individual liberties if wearing the Burkini was a “proven risk” to public order. The judges reasoned that there was no such risk.

The French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM), the Collective against Islamophobia in France (CCIF) and Amnesty International all welcomed the Conseil d’État verdict. Though this might just be a Pyrrhic victory for there is a much deeper prejudice pervading French politics.

The Burkini ban places the mantra of multiculturalism on trial. It segregates societies, castrates cultures, it is a pointless Orientalist top-down hegemonic sermonising of what a woman should and should not wear. The French Burkini ban over-ruling takes place “legally” but not “psychologically” in French political “mindsets” who still have a long journey to go in unreservedly accepting “the other”.

Witnessing cops in Nice forcibly compelling a Muslim woman to strip off her Burkini at Gun-Point was a stain on humanity. A draconian measure defeating the founding principles of France’s 1789 Revolution: Liberté, égalité and fraternité.

Misguided misogynists are under a faux illusion that ‘secularism’ is to be imposed from the barrel of a gun over a peaceful woman on a beach. Has the very ethos of French secularism descended down to mere draconian dress code policing? Has French secularism (laïcité) come down to patronisingly body-shaming women? Is that where secularism draws its inspiration from? This is neither the secularism Robespierre nor what the Founding Fathers sacrificed their lives for.

France famously boasts ‘freedom of expression’ on Charlie Hebdo’s caricatures. How about when a Muslim woman seeks sovereignty over her body? Why then does ‘freedom of expression’ selectively go out the window?

With the April 2017 presidential election, and a Republic reeling from a sequence of extremist attacks, French politicians of all hues are clamouring over the Burkini debate boasting their stringent secular credentials. Majority parties are horrified at the rise of the Far Right in France, and are predictably exploiting the Burkini issue to score points.

Contrary to popular belief, in France the Burkini ban is not merely an extremist Far-right phenomena, even the socialist Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, maintained that the Burkini was “a political sign of religious proselytising” and that the bans were necessary to maintain “public order”, deriding the Burkini as “the enslavement of women”. Suddenly the primeval patriarchy have self-appointed themselves as moral arbiters of women’s clothing!

Marine Le Pen, of the xenophobic Front National, echoed her staunch support of the Burkini ban: “The soul of France is in question... France does not lock away a woman’s body”. So is the ‘soul’ of France that fragile? Such a Westernised hegemonic view of a woman’s body delegitimises the very nuance of the rich diversity inherent within feminism.

Conservative mayors such as those of Le Touquet and Daniel Fasquelle oppose the Burkini and vow to try their utmost to maintain a ban. Fasquelle even stated that the Burkini “enslaves women”, inciting “terrorism”.

Nothing could be more misleading. Linking the Burkini to terrorism is extreme naïveté. Should all French women in Burkinis and men in beards be subjugated to alarming scrutiny by the security services? Superficial skin-deep religious Burkini profiling never works. This is exactly what Isis relishes as it makes terrorism easier. By declaring what to look for in advance we give terrorists free reign in knowing what not to look like.

If authorities profile people of brown colour or men sporting beards, Isis will simply recruit white Caucasians like the Tsarnaev brothers of Boston Marathon fame. If authorities screen women with head scarves Isis will head-hunt women like the Paris 2015 Bataclan bomber who was a bikini-clad, alcohol-drinking Westernised woman. We cannot over-simplistically stereotype our way into surveillance.

In fact, radicals deploy outward hedonism just to avoid being detected.

France needs to be more intelligent about its application of secularism. Secularism is not a rigid top-down dogma but an accommodating spirit, especially in a multi-religious society which houses five million Muslims.

France needs to intelligently balance secularism with individual freedom(s) of expression. One fails to understand how the Burkini (a body-suit) worn not in a state building but on a beach can ever be an affront to secularism.

Despite overturning the ban, an increasingly intolerant French political class of all stripes will refuse to swim (pun intended) with the Muslim Burkini tide.

Policy promulgations do not alter prejudice. Regulations do not reverse racism. Laws do not change mindsets. The Conseil d’État is a drop on a still very prejudiced French beach.

Source: thenews.com.pk/print/146999-The-swimwear-saga

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Politics of Flags and Nationalism

By Durdana Najam

02-Sep-16

The moment Muttahida Qaumi Movement’s (MQM) chief, Altaf Hussain, called Pakistan an epicentre of terrorism and requested India and the US to invade Pakistan, Pakistani flags began appearing in hoards across the country. Sentiments of every Pakistani were hurt when Hussain showed his disdain for Pakistan to the extent of seeing it disappear from the world map. The uproar against Hussain and, consequently, the MQM was natural. The matter was worsened when on Hussain’s call some media houses were ransacked. These became twin attacks: one on Pakistan, and the other on the independence of media.

The ensuing crackdown on the MQM head office Nine-Zero, its sectors and the arrest of its party leaders and sector in-charge threw the city in doldrums. Many people had already predicted the end of the MQM. People waited to hear something from the government or the army chief that would prove a last nail in the MQM political coffin. Most of all, there was a demand to ban the MQM. It was also expected that the mayoral elections in Karachi would be postponed to keep the MQM out of the election loop. None of this happened. Suddenly the contours of the protest changed. Social media that had been fuming with anti-MQM slogans turned tack, and began heaping blame on the government for its complacency. Rangers too were looked at with anguish for not showing its teeth. It was as if a golden opportunity had been lost to ‘delete’ the existence of the MQM.

All along one thing that occurred with consistent frequency was the hoisting of Pakistani flag on anything that bore the MQM mark. Rangers disturbed flags among the people of Karachi to put up on vehicles, bicycles, shops, homes and other places. The slogan of ‘Long live Pakistan’ was chanted everywhere.

The question is why Pakistan’s sovereignty is thrown into peril at the mere reference that the country deserves to be taken off the world map. What is so vulnerable about Pakistan that its image needs reinforcement at a slight attack to its existence? We have seen this displayed in Balochistan. In fact, a particular spectacle is arranged on every August 14 where flags are put up at every nook and cranny of the province to ‘generate’ nationalism.

Whatever Altaf Hussain said deserved denouement. Balochistan has been infiltrated by the foreign element, and has remained a sticking point in the political milieu of the country. The malice, however, runs deeper than what meets the eye.

Hussain’s diatribe was not new. What had been new was the reaction to his hatred against Pakistan. There was no shutdown or strike by the business community or transporters. Mayhem was limited to the attack carried out on the media houses. No targeted killing followed. It remained peaceful, mostly. In time to come, Hussain’s pictures were taken off Karachi’s streets coupled with anything that was of reminiscence of him: the famous Mukka (fist) Chowk was renamed Liaquat Chowk. There was relief that Pakistan’s ‘dignity’ had been restored.

Has it happened? Has the world started taking us seriously since? Are we better off renaming the MQM as MQM Pakistan? Have the efforts to bring the Pak Ser Zameen party as an alternative to the MQM started bearing results? Will Pakistan be a better place to live in?

In all seriousness, these questions are still difficult to answer. Nationalism is a solemn matter left to the optics. And 2008 onward, after Barack Obama became the president of the US, and accelerated drone attacks in Pakistan, we cried hoarse over the breach of our sovereignty. However, as revealed later by Bob Woodward in his book Obama’s Wars, Pakistan and the US had an arrangement whereby Pakistan would protest against the drone attacks, while the US would keep bombing terrorists in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

Whether we bolster nationalism or not, Pakistanis love this country. Many have already given their lives in terror-related incidents that include civil society and law enforcement agencies. However, nationalism or the mere promotion of it does not make any country livable or bearable for its people.

In his farewell analysis on Pakistan, the outgoing director of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Marc-Andre Franche says that Pakistan has antiquated and non-functioning public institutions. Critical of Pakistan’s elite he points out how public funds never reach the constituencies, especially in the rural areas, perpetuating poverty. He comments on politicians who plunder public money but reach out to the United Nations for funds to improve sanitation, state of education and water-related issues back home. Franche goes on to say that Pakistan’s future is being compromised with 38.8 percent poverty rate. He does not fail to mention that due to “apartheid of opportunities” young people in Pakistan want to leave this country at first instance. About media Franche observes that the powerful use it to their advantage adding to the erosion of democracy and institutions.

At the other end, in a conference organised by the ministry of planning and development on “Early Childhood Development,” it was revealed that Pakistan, globally, has one of the highest rates of child mortality. Of every 1000 children 40.7 dies before reaching age five.

With these facts in hand, does putting flag on every vehicle, building or house lends hope that Pakistan is a place where its people are provided with equal opportunities, and where the rule of law does not differentiate between the rich and the poor?

Balochistan can be decorated with flags on every August 14, but to carve Pakistan in the hearts of the Baloch require eliminating poverty and giving the people of Balochistan the right to use its resources. Balochistan is the most impoverished province of the country even today. We may argue with evidence that volatility in Balochistan is the result of the mischief of foreign hands. However, we cannot support with any evidence the sincerity of any government including the military to modernise the province. The dearth of education, clean drinking water and health facilities are still in need of redressal. Almost other 85 percent of the area in the country is in equal disarray.

When Angelina Jolie came to Pakistan after the 2005 earthquake, she was shocked to see the insensitivity of Pakistan’s elite after attending the reception that was thrown in her honour at the Prime Minister House. When half the country was submerged in water, and when thousands of people were dying of hunger and insufficient medical facilities, the elites were busy impressing a woman who had come to donate five million dollars to rehabilitate what the actress thought was one of the worst calamities to hit the country. It hardly ashamed the elite though. And 11 years later, the report by the former UNDP Director Marc-Andre Franche has the same story to tell: the elites of Pakistan have usurped the rights of the taxpayers and the poor alike.

Whether we like it or not, there is an Altaf Hussain in each of our politicians. While he intimidated, harmed and plundered the people of Karachi, the political elite did the same by keeping those who sent them to the assemblies impoverished, uneducated and physically malnourished. A poor man with no self-esteem and control over his destiny is as good as killed, extorted, intimidated, and plundered.

Nationalism sans equal opportunity and sincere leadership is just an illusion and a gimmick for the political elites.

Pakistan’s existence is an inimitable phenomenon of the 20th century. The circumstances in which it was made, and the political expediency exercised in the engineering of its state narratives in its formative years all but point to the fact that it had been a creation beyond ordinary. Perhaps that is the reason why the argument of its ‘saalmiyat’ (integrity) being in jeopardy every now and then is not an uncommon subject if we closely follow political entertainment offered by evening talk shows. The extraordinary aspect of such an argument, however, lies not exclusively in the usual and somewhat clichéd concerns i.e. existential threats posed by hostile neighbours, or the threat from religious fanaticism that has crept into our society, but interestingly, in the evolution of our understanding of the ideology that we were taught became the basis of the birth of this great nation.

Though an open discussion on ideology and national identity now dangles on the borderline of the Article six realm, however, this wasn’t always necessarily the case. An interesting anecdote that is oft quoted is the discussion that took place on this question in the National Assembly in 1962. While discussing the Political Parties Bill, Maulana Abdul Bari of Jamaat-e-Islami used the term “Ideology of Pakistan” for the first time. Chaudhry Fazal Elahi, who later became the president of Pakistan, objected to the term and asked for clarification on its meaning. The member who had moved the bill replied, “The ideology of Pakistan is Islam.” To this, no one further objected. One can quite well imagine the construction of narratives that was taking place in the guise of nation-building at that time.

The Pakistan Studies book for Class 10 of the Punjab Textbook Board has its first chapter dedicated to an exposition of the ideology of Pakistan. It traces the lineage of Muslim nationalist struggle in India to the day when the first Hindu of the sub-continent converted to Islam. Nothing more on that. The next chapters take students a millennium later in time to urge upon them the contributions of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan towards the Two Nation Theory. A young mind, however, usually fails to crtically question the theory and its implications for the primary reason that asking such questions is rarely encouraged by the teacher. However, the seeds of confusion that could later transform into a life-long identity crisis are sown at this stage of learning.

This identity crisis is not difficult to observe in the life of a common Pakistani. I have personally witnessed countless occasions where people on being questioned about their identity recognise themselves as a Muslim first and a Pakistani thereafter. Sometimes, a third category of regional association i.e. Punjabi, Sindhi, etc. does exist for some, but mostly, the conversation just ends on being a Pakistani and nothing more. No wonder, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan was branded a traitor when he replied to the same question in quite the opposite order.

The concept of national identity in Pakistan has, therefore, always taken strength from a complete divorce from the indigenous or regional associations of the people. It is not uncommon to see people questioning the loyalty of Bacha Khan, or G M Syed towards the state of Pakistan for the only reason that any association with anything that might come into conflict with our Pakistani identity is deemed to be a treasonous act. Why is it that I belonging to the region of Punjab cannot appreciate the resistance offered by Maharaja Ranjit Singh towards British India without attracting any particular label on me? For the only reason that associating with the administrative brilliance and military genius of a Sikh ruler, though hailing from the same region that now forms one of the provinces of Pakistan, goes against the inherent idea of Muslim nationalism by which I am supposed to understand the historical roots of this nation.

These engineered notions that form a significant aspect of our understanding of the state of Pakistan, however, have paved the way to another form of identity crisis, one that was never a matter of concern before. The analogy of Islam being the essence of the ideology of Pakistan might not have raised any questions in the National Assembly of 1962. However, it now surely does when the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan rejects the existence of Pakistan on the basis of the ‘un-Islamic’ nature of the republic that we live in. How can a young suicide bomber be convinced to believe that the republic that he is living in is actually an Islamic republic?

These are the questions that should be of prime concern to the present policy-makers of this country. The hyper-nationalism and the physical expression of our love for our country on national holidays won’t do the job anymore unless the nationalistic dogmas created by our skewed understanding of the ideology of Pakistan are effectively done away with.

For Balochistan, its strategic location is both a blessing and a curse. With its vast natural resource wealth along with being South Asia’s gateway to the Middle East, Balochistan holds the keys to Pakistan’s next phase of economic development. However, given its vast mineral reserve, geostrategic location and geo-economic potential, Balochistan finds itself at the very epicentre of a conflict being fought by various actors at multiple levels.

Terrorism and regional dynamics: Separatist Baloch groups waging war with the state along with terrorist elements including offshoots of the al-Qaeda, ISIS and Taliban has only ensured greater instability, unpredictability and a tragic loss of life.

Meanwhile, India’s interests in achieving commercial access to the Middle East and Central Asia are in direct competition with Pakistan’s goal of achieving trade access through the Balochi port of Gwadar. With an Indian port in the southern Iranian city of Chabahar set to be operational in two years time according to the Indian government, it is not inconceivable that it would be in India’s interest to thwart Pakistan’s access and allow China to indirectly benefit. The capture and subsequent arrest of the alleged RAW agent Kulbushan Yadav in Balochistan earlier this year would lend credence to Indian operations in the region.

It would also be in Iran’s interest to ensure the success of Chabahar and become the gateway for India rather than allow its ‘Sunni neighbour’ to capitalise through Gwadar. It may also explain Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s refusal to discuss India’s potential involvement in Balochistan so as not to irk its regional ally. Iran also has a Balochi insurgency on its side of the border, and any economic prosperity through Gwadar in Pakistani Balochistan could energise and amplify the desires of the Iranian Baloch.

Yet these aren’t the only factors influencing and driving the conflict alone. Balochistan also finds itself at the centre of a greater war over global trade routes.

The China-US-Russia connection: To avoid ruffling the feathers of the US and its western-backed allies by challenging US maritime supremacy, China has opted for a strategy it has dubbed the “New Silk Road” -- a vast network of highways, railways, pipelines and ports that will reduce China’s dependence on long sea routes. China currently relies on the Straits of Malacca, a narrow, 805-kilometre stretch of water between the Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian island of Sumatra, to supply close to 40 percent of its oil. Given the US Navy presence in the region and the threat of piracy, diversification of those trade routes is essential.

Enter Balochistan and $46 billion worth of Chinese investment into the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which will enable China to import Middle East oil through Gwadar port, and up to its western-most Xinjiang province. Not only would this strategy lead to greater development in a province prone to secessionist tendencies, it would also reduce China’s reliance on the South China Sea. Any potential extension of CPEC northwards could tie South Asia, Western China with Central Asia and Russia — a nightmare scenario for US interests.

It is no surprise, therefore that the US has been active in Balochistan. A 2009 article in UK’s The Guardian stated that Blackwater, the notorious US private mercenary firm, was operating in Balochistan based on the claims of an ex-US official. The killing of Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour by a drone strike in Balochistan earlier this year indicates continued US surveillance and involvement in the region. Hawks inside US military circles also do no make any secret of their hopes of redrawing the Middle East and South Asia, which is perhaps best reflected in the “Blood Borders” map published in the Armed Forces Journal that depicts a “Free Balochistan.” For the US, a Balochistan in turmoil is in its best interest to ensure China remains on the back foot.

Connecting the Dots:

Based on this analysis, a simple pattern emerges. The US, India and post-nuclear deal Iran stand on one side, and Pakistan, China and Russia on the other. with Gwadar being at the focal point. The almost 160 people killed in Balochistan so far in 2016 due to terrorism-related incidents may seem, on the surface, as a local conflict between the Pakistani military establishment against a lawless, backward area festering with homegrown terrorism, and although that might be partly true, it is also true that various regional and international players benefit from the same chaos that helps further their own geopolitical designs.

- See more at: http://newageislam.com/pakistan-press/new-age-islam-edit-bureau/altaf-hussain%E2%80%99s-%E2%80%98final-mistake%E2%80%99--new-age-islam-s-selection,-02-september-2016/d/108440#sthash.FG3d10sx.dpuf